How to change your timeline FPS in DaVinci Resolve regardless of the one you have set in the project settings. #DaVinciResolve #EditingTips #postproduction
Amazing tip. They should allow you to select the timeline frame rate when creating a video right off the bat so we don't have to do this... Much appreciated video.
got a big problem, here. And I'm really new to Davinci Resove. If my footage has 59FPS, how to I setup my timeline to 59, as there's only 50, 59.94 and 60.???? Thanks in advance...!
When i do this it leaves frame gaps throughout my entire timeline. No matter which frame rate i switch it to. This didnt used to happen until the new update, any way you think i can fix this?
If there's anything in your timeline that does show up on the Cut page it wont be ported over!! EX. i had some audio only clips that were only on the Edit page, not the Cut page. Got around it by just copying everything on the Edit page and pasting it into the new timeline instead.
it's an old upload but i will ask anyway, after using this method i found an issue where there is small gapes between some sequences even if there is a transition effect but i think it only happens if you finished editing (like cutting, color, adding effects, speed ramp...) so you need to jump between those gapes to fix it, for me i need it since i make two of the same edit with different fps (25 and 50 fps)
That definitely sounds like a bug of some sort. Have you tried Edit>Delete Gaps (Shift+F8)? You need to have your cursor focus on the timeline to work.
@@StocksyUnited that works if it was just a simple edit or didn't start working on the edit yet but for me it's very complicated and it's a finished edit that i need to make into 2 files with different fps, there is multiple layers and it's all synced up together with music and everything, so instead of deleting the gapes i slide one of the ends of the specific sequence to complet that empty space which is like one or two frames, but i actually found a trick that was so obvious that i even laughed of how dumb i was, i just use the rendered 50fps file in a 25fps timeline, but still those gapes shouldn't be a thing
It really deppends on what your final delivery is for and how was your source filmed. 24 FPS filmed with 1/50 shutterspeed will give you that buttery motion blur we're used to for decades watching movies. Filming in higher frame rates has it's use (slow motion, etc.) but if played back at real-time will give you a hyper-realistic look.